Improving documentation of treatment decisions. Fluent knowledge of black-box warnings may help clinicians improve documentation of their treatment decisions, particularly the risks and benefits of their medication choices. Fluency with black-box warnings will help clinicians accurately document both their awareness of these risks, and how these risks informed their risk-benefit analysis in specific clinical situations.
Despite the clear importance the FDA places on black-box warnings, they are not often a topic of study in training or in postgraduate continuing education, and as a result, not all clinicians may be equally conversant with black-box warnings. While black-box warnings do change over time, many psychotropic medication black-box warnings are long-standing and well-established, and they evolve slowly enough to make mastering these warnings worthwhile in order to make the most informed clinical decisions for patient care.
Keeping up-to-date
There are practical and useful ways for busy clinicians to stay up-to-date with black-box warnings. Although these resources exist in multiple locations, together they provide convenient ways to keep current.
The FDA provides access to black-box warnings via its comprehensive database, DRUGS@FDA (https://www.accessdata.fda.gov/scripts/cder/daf/). Detailed information about REMS (and corresponding ETASU and other information related to REMS programs) is available at REMS@FDA (https://www.accessdata.fda.gov/scripts/cder/rems/index.cfm). Clinicians can make safety reports that may contribute to FDA decision-making on black-box warnings by contacting MedWatch (https://www.fda.gov/safety/medwatch-fda-safety-information-and-adverse-event-reporting-program), the FDA’s adverse events reporting system. MedWatch releases safety information reports, which can be followed on Twitter @FDAMedWatch. Note that FDA information generally is organized by specific drug, and not into categories, such as psychotropic medications.
BlackBoxRx (www.blackboxrx.com) is a subscription-based web service that some clinicians may have access to via facility or academic resources as part of a larger FormWeb software package. Individuals also can subscribe (currently, $89/year).
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